Oregon lawmakers are back in session, and they have housing on their minds. So do people who want to address climate change.
Oregonians have increasingly asked their representatives , both to help reduce costs for renters and home buyers and to address unsanctioned camping around the state.
Climate advocates, meanwhile, see a chance to make buildings new and old more energy efficient amid all that building. They鈥檙e also asking lawmakers gathered at the Capitol for more accountability on climate action and to set the state up for success if it receives billions in federal funding for more clean energy retrofits.
New buildings codes, retrofits and energy efficiency
The burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil and natural gas is driving human-caused climate change. And over the past decade, Oregonians all around the state have begun to feel its effects: more intense wildfires, and drought. As the state continues the clean energy transition in the transportation sector 鈥 the largest greenhouse gas emitter 鈥 its focus is beginning to broaden. According to the the residential and commercial sector is the second largest carbon emitter in the state. Those emissions mostly come from burning fossil fuels to power homes and buildings. And that has gotten the attention of legislators this session.
State Rep. Pam Marsh (D-Ashland) is the chair of the House Committee on Climate, Energy and Environment. She said buildings and energy efficiency are major topics this session. Marsh said most of the upcoming legislation for new and existing buildings will come from , a committee made up of legislators and a diverse group of interests and perspectives, from utilities to environmental groups to school districts to labor unions. The recommendations include incentives for heat pumps and other energy-efficient appliances, creating building codes for new buildings that would reduce energy consumption, and launching policies to retrofit all state and local government buildings by 2035 to lead by example.
Meredith Connolly, the director of Climate Solutions Oregon, served on the Resilient Buildings Task Force. She said the goal was to identify policies the state could adopt that would reduce greenhouse gas emissions while creating buildings that run on clean energy moving forward.
鈥淥regon has made some incredible strides to clean up our electric grid and start to transition our transportation sector, but the building sector is the second biggest source of climate pollution, and we need to see more progress there,鈥 Connolly said. 鈥淚鈥檓 hoping to see some cornerstone policies that set a framework for our built environment to reduce pollution and increase the resilience of our homes and buildings in the face of climate impacts.鈥
Connolly said her organization hopes legislators will pass a building performance standard, which would establish performance levels and improvements buildings must achieve around energy and water use, as well as carbon emissions. Connolly and others said such a standard would improve the energy efficiency of large commercial buildings over time and construct new buildings with stricter codes. She also said she hopes to see legislation that would transition government buildings to all-electric energy and upgrade schools鈥 heating, air conditioning and ventilation systems to be more energy efficient and reduce pollution.
鈥淲e have to not repeat the mistakes of the past, but just spend the time and dollars to build differently, to really prioritize frontline communities in how we transition to a clean energy economy,鈥 she said.
Taking advantage of federal funds
Another major focus of the task force was figuring out how Oregon could obtain federal funds from the Inflation Reduction Act, which is set to in clean energy and climate action.鈥檚 climate program director Nora Apter said the state government needs to make sure there are strong programs in place that make it easy for Oregonians to see these benefits as they improve their homes.

鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about $370 billion just for climate and clean energy,鈥 she said. 鈥淥bviously that鈥檚 not all going to Oregon, but there are a lot of steps that the state can and should take this session to best position us for success in leveraging those dollars and translating them into meaningful benefits for Oregonians.鈥
Apter said that could mean having more staff at state agencies and setting up a system that provides direction on what money Oregon should go after.
鈥淚 think there鈥檚 ever-increasing awareness that this session is going to be absolutely key to making the most of federal investments,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he theme is really opportunity, excitement for innovation and a vision for what accelerating the transition to a clean energy economy looks like for Oregon.鈥
Energy efficiency, federal funding and new codes for buildings aren鈥檛 the only top climate priorities this session. Marsh said Oregon needs to ensure it is continuing to follow the ambitious climate goals set by Gov. Kate Brown. One of those is requires electric utilities like Portland General Electric and Pacific Power to have net-neutral carbon emissions by 2040.
鈥淚t鈥檚 one thing to set the policy theoretically on the table,鈥 Marsh said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 another thing to follow through and make sure that we鈥檙e actually doing everything that we need.鈥
Marsh also pointed out, which requires state agencies to identify and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. She said she plans to seek legislation that reaffirms the climate goals set in place by Brown.
鈥淔ollowing through and monitoring that process, I think, is a big responsibility of the Legislature and something that we鈥檙e going to start on our very first day,鈥 she said.
Marsh said the state could also see legislation on building community resilience to the effects of climate change. Last year, an Oregon Health Authority study showed how extreme weather events are , from anger to shame and survivor鈥檚 guilt, as they deal with the consequences of climate change.
But Marsh said the state needs to look into building resilience as well as ensuring Oregon鈥檚 power grid can also handle climate change.
During the 2020 Labor Day fires, many residents across the state lost their homes due to wildfires. In , the Almeda fire destroyed more than In and filed a claiming the wildfire that burned down their homes in their area was ignited by power lines.
Powerful winter storms have also left without power as recently as December.
Some of the changes to Oregon鈥檚 power grid lawmakers seek could involve building more resilience through . Marsh said Oregon needs to create an energy strategy that continues to look into offshore wind and renewable hydrogen.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a variety of potential out there, but we need to know how to tap all of that and weave it into a tapestry,鈥 Marsh said.
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